The New Zealand Dollar is the best performing major currency of the day as markets rapidly scale back expectations that the country's central bank could introduce negative interest rates to help float the economy.

The NZ Dollar has risen following comments from various Reserve Bank of New Zealand officials that suggest that cutting the Overnight Cash Rate to below zero remained some way off, "it’s got to be seen to be effective, efficient and operationally capable," said Governor Adrian Orr in a media interview.

Expectations had been building that the RBNZ would cut interest rates yet further in coming weeks - and raise the level of its quantitative easing programme - in order to provide support for the New Zealand economy, which has been battered by the global coronavirus crisis.

When a central bank loosens policy, the currency it issues tends to fall in value. Yet with most major central banks cutting interest rates and printing money under expanded quantitative easing programmes due to the coronacrisis, the relative impact of RBNZ action on the NZ Dollar would assumably be limited.

However, in proportion to the country's GDP, the RBNZ intervention is one of the largest in the G10 and this has understandably weighed on the performance of the NZ Dollar.

News that the RBNZ is in fact in no hurry to boost its assistance to the economy is therefore considered to be supportive for the NZ Dollar.

Above: The New Zealand Dollar is outperforming its peers on May 20.

The Pound-to-New Zealand Dollar exchange rate has fallen back to 2.0050, having been as high as 2.0714 earlier in the month. The New Zealand-to-U.S. Dollar exchange rate is meanwhile back up to 0.6105, having been down at 0.5940 earlier in the month.

The messaging by RBNZ officials on the prospect of further interest rate cuts was in turn reinforced by Orr's deputy, Geoff Bascand.

"NZD has been under pressure recently after various officials expressed a willingness to consider negative rates, but Deputy Governor Geoff Bascand said the Monetary Policy Committee had made “a clear statement” that rates are on hold until early next year," says Marshall Gittler, Head of Investment Research at BDSwiss Group.

"We are very conscious that our word matters, and the credibility of what we say is very important to the Reserve Bank. We are confident we won’t be moving to negative interest rates before March next year,” said Bascand.

With the RBNZ clearly in no rush to cut rates, a downward force on the New Zealand Dollar appears to be lifting, potentially allowing for further gains.

The Pound-to-New Zealand Dollar rate was on route to the bottom of its new, lower trading range Friday as the Kiwi erased its coronavirus-related losses, but Sterling is now a target for short-sellers and has further to fall.

Pound Sterling is another 0.40% lower against the New Zealand Dollar at 1.9502 the time of writing on Thursday, should the exchange rate close in the red at the time of the day's close then the pair will have registered four successive days of negative closes.

The New Zealand Dollar has overturned its 2020 losses against the Pound and now stands 0.40% higher, courtesy of the strong rally experienced over the course of the past month that could see it overturn losses against other major currencies in the near future.

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The news and information contained on this site is by no means investment advice. We intend to merely bring together and collate the latest views and news pertaining to the currency markets - subsequent decision making is done so independently of this website. All quoted exchange rates are indicative. We cannot guarantee 100% accuracy owing to the highly volatile and liquid nature of this market.